"George W. Barrowcliff" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:eQQMq%(E-Mail Removed)...
> I have a 40 GB drive that I partitioned when I bought the machine into
> three operating system primary partitions along with an extended DOS
> partiton.
>
> The XP partition is 22 GB and I am down to about 32% free space and
> would like to reclaim the other two 20 GB partitions before it becomes
> a problem..
>
> E: Partition Basic Healthy (Active) 22.57 GB
> 22.57 GB 100%
> H: Partition Basic Healthy 4.89 GB
> 4.89 GB 100%
> FAT(D) Partition Basic FAT Healthy(Page File) 1.99 GB
> 504 MB 24%
> FAT32 (G
Partition Basic FAT32 Healthy (Active) 22.56 GB
> 21.65 GB 95%
> IBM_PRELOAD (C
Partition Basic NTFS Healthy(System) 22.51 GB
> 7.33 GB 32%
The information for Disk Management (for what you have shown) gives no
information about which are the primary partition and which are the
extended partitions, their order on the drive, and the order of logical
drives within extended partitions. Also, the file system is missing
from a couple of those that are listed so we don't know if they are file
systems that Partition Magic can understand (since Disk Management isn't
listing their file systems). Use the graphical view in Disk Management
to relay how the partitions are setup, or use Partition Magic. You can
also use the PartInfo tool included with Partition Magic and save it to
a file. The output is so long that wrapping would occur if you simply
pasted it in a post here. Attach it as a .txt file to your post. You
are posting through Microsoft's NNTP server and, I believe, their server
will accept posts with attachments although this is a non-binary group.
Without knowing which are the primary and extended partitions, and their
order, and the order of logical drives within any extended partitions,
there is no way anyone can tell you how to delete or move partitions so
you can get contiguous free space next to the partition that you want to
enlarge. Basically, save the data from the partitions that you will
delete to create free space, move the partitions around so the free
space gets moved next to the one that you want to resize, and then
resize that partition.
Also mention which are the system and boot partitions (they may be the
same) for Windows. C: is the normal default but I'm not sure if the
"pre-load" partition is the one from which you restore the OS and maybe
E: is where the OS is installed that you load.